A Four-Coordinate End-On Superoxocopper(II) Complex: Probing the Link between Coordination Number and Reactivity

J Am Chem Soc. 2024 Aug 28;146(34):23704-23716. doi: 10.1021/jacs.3c12268. Epub 2024 Aug 14.

Abstract

Although the reactivity of five-coordinate end-on superoxocopper(II) complexes, CuII1-O2•-), is dominated by hydrogen atom transfer, the majority of four-coordinate CuII1-O2•-) complexes published thus far display nucleophilic reactivity. To investigate the origin of this difference, we have developed a four-coordinate end-on superoxocopper(II) complex supported by a sterically encumbered bis(2-pyridylmethyl)amine ligand, dpb2-MeBPA (1), and compared its substrate reactivity with that of a five-coordinate end-on superoxocopper(II) complex ligated by a similarly substituted tris(2-pyridylmethyl)amine, dpb3-TMPA (2). Kinetic isotope effect (KIE) measurements and correlation of second-order rate constants (k2's) versus oxidation potentials (Eox) for a range of phenols indicates that the complex [CuII1-O2•-)(1)]+ reacts with phenols via a similar hydrogen atom transfer (HAT) mechanism to [CuII1-O2•-)(2)]+. However, [CuII1-O2•-)(1)]+ performs HAT much more quickly, with its k2 for reaction with 2,6-di-tert-butyl-4-methoxyphenol (MeO-ArOH) being >100 times greater. Furthermore, [CuII1-O2•-)(1)]+ can oxidize C-H bond substrates possessing stronger bonds than [CuII1-O2•-)(2)]+ is able to, and it reacts with N-methyl-9,10-dihydroacridine (MeAcrH2) approximately 200 times faster. The much greater facility for substrate oxidation displayed by [CuII1-O2•-)(1)]+ is attributed to it possessing higher inherent electrophilicity than [CuII1-O2•-)(2)]+, which is a direct consequence of its lower coordination number. These observations are of relevance to enzymes in which four-coordinate end-on superoxocopper(II) intermediates, rather than their five-coordinate congeners, are routinely invoked as the active oxidants responsible for substrate oxidation.